Friday, 2 April 2021

Browsing the Board of Trade - AJCP



B for Browsing

B for Browsing, a starting point for examining how the records are presented and arranged.
What to choose for B?

In PRO series of the AJCP

  • Board of Customs 
  • Board of Longitude
  • Board of Trade 
  • British Transport Commission 

In the M Series

The choice ranges from records of the British Museum to the company of Bryant and May. Perhaps you may be interested in the records of the Bedfordshire or Berkshire Record Offices or the Brynmor Jones Library or one of the dozens of other Bs listed.

Let's jump into the records of the Board Of Trade from the PRO records.

The first thing seen is a Finding Aid or Guide for the available online records. On the left is a Table of Contents and the right side of the screen lists the contents of each digitised microfilm in further detail.
Additional historical information is often provided here in the guides.

These records range from 1784 - 1952. The majority of these records are handwritten, no OCR (Optical Character Recognition) has been applied. Browsing this collection however may reveal some details about our ancestors.

Finding Aid - Board of Trade

I have chosen to open the Fonds: Records of the Registrar General of Shipping and Seamen, 1826 - 1921, Under this heading I find:
  • Certificates of registration of vessels registered at ports in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore and Prince of Wales Island. Certificates are grouped by year and then by port of registration
  • Registers of certificates of competency. Masters and mates: colonial trade, 1870 - 1921 (issued to masters and mates employed on colonial vessels) as well as
  • Registrar General of Shipping and Seamen. Registers of certificates of competency. Engineers: colonial, 1877 - 1921
Scroll down to see the list of films
  • Choose the icon to the left of the file name to display the microfilm images. They will be displayed on the right of the screen.
  • Choose any image to view in full detail.
  • On the image now displayed there are options to magnify, go to full screen and navigate to the next image
  • The option to Go Up a Level provides a Browse button that then displays the first 20 images on a microfilm

https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-743616214

Finding your ancestor

If you had an ancestor who was a seaman perhaps you will find him in the Certificates of Competency where details include place and year of birth as well as the place and date of the granting of the appropriate certificate. 

He may not have migrated to Australia or New Zealand but his certificate of competency may be in these records.

Some examples clipped from the hundreds of pages available.


Just a reminder: these records are not indexed  - by browsing these records you may find the "old salts" in your families.

Previous posts in this series

This post first appeared on https://carmelgalvin.info

Thursday, 1 April 2021

About the AJCP

The AJCP

What is it? 
The Australian Joint Copying Project (AJCP) is a collection of unique historical material relating to Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific dating from 1560 to 1984.


50 years....

Yes, this project started in 1948 and continued for 50 years. 

Then from 2017-2020 the National Library of Australia undertook to digitise these films with completion in June 2020. Access to these records in now available directly through the AJCP portal or by searching directly in the Diaries, Letters and Archives category of Trove.

Throughout this month I will examine the various methods of browsing and searching this vast collection. There are more than 8.2 million microfilm images and 10 000+ explanatory pages of descriptive text. Some records will be taken from the PRO series, records now held at The National Archives of the UK, and some from the M (Miscellaneous) series, records collected from a wide variety of organisations, libraries and archives from across the UK.

As you can imagine 26 blog posts will only scrape the surface of this huge resource but there are some interesting finds along the way. Each letter of the alphabet will highlight a different range of resources.

A small beginning but much to be found along the way.

Here is a 14 min introductory video made by the National Library of Australia for those who have not yet had the chance to view it.



This post first appeared on https://carmelgalvin.info

Wednesday, 10 March 2021

Theme reveal: A - Z challenge 2021


Over the past year I have been investigating the rich resources of the AJCP. My theme for the April A-Z blogging challenge will focus on access to, and the variety of resources available through the Australian Joint Copying Project. 

While my interest is mainly family history there are a wealth of resources about the early days of both Australia and New Zealand of interest to any historian. Join me here from April 1. 



This post first appeared on https://carmelgalvin.info

Enjoyed this post? Want to see more?